1 / 27

Isolation and Identification of Gram Positive Cocci

Isolation and Identification of Gram Positive Cocci. Identified method for Staphylococci. Gram-stain Isolation and culture Pure culture Direct identif ication. Staphylococci are Gram-positive cocci, typically arranged in clumps or Grape-like clusters. Direct identif ication.

Download Presentation

Isolation and Identification of Gram Positive Cocci

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Isolation and Identification of Gram Positive Cocci

  2. Identified method for Staphylococci • Gram-stain • Isolation and culture • Pure culture • Directidentification Mohammed laqqan

  3. Staphylococci are Gram-positive cocci, typically arranged in clumps or Grape-like clusters Mohammed laqqan

  4. Directidentification • Coagulase Test • Mannitol fermentation test. • DNase Test • Novobiocin (NB) disc Mohammed laqqan

  5. Mohammed laqqan

  6. The DNase Test • Inoculate DNase agar plates with a loop so that the growth is in plaques about 1 cm in diameter.I • ncubate at 370C overnight. • Flood the plate with 1 N hydrochloric acid.Clearing around the colonies indicates DNase activity. • The hydrochloric acid reacts with unchanged deoxyribonucleic acid to give a cloudy precipitate. • A few other bacteria,e.g. Serratia,may give a positive reaction. Mohammed laqqan

  7. Staphylococcus aureus Growing on DNase Agar Mohammed laqqan

  8. Blood agar with a novobiocin (NB) disc Staphylococcus aureus Growing on Blood Agar S Staphylococcus saprophyticus Growing on Blood Agar R Mohammed laqqan

  9. Types Of Streptococcus Mohammed laqqan

  10. (β) Haemolytic Streptococcus groups • S. pyogenes • Group A • S. agalactiae • Group B (occasionally α or none) • Streptococcus bovis • Group D (α or none, occasionally β) Mohammed laqqan

  11. Group A strep: S. pyogenes • Gram +ve cocci • Catalase (+ve) • Small, round, grey colonies • β-haemolysis • zone is large • Group A antigen Mohammed laqqan

  12. Isolation and Identification of (Streptococcus pyogenes) • on Blood agar. Streptococcus pyogenes produces a zone of beta hemolysis around 2-3mm in diameter surrounding each colony • Sensitivity to the antibiotic bacitracin • Group A Strep is senstive, other b haemolytic streps are resistant. Mohammed laqqan

  13. Bacitracin sensitivity Mohammed laqqan

  14. Identification of Streptococci Mohammed laqqan

  15. Group B: S. agalactiae • S. agalactiae • Identification • Catalase negative • Bacitracin resistant • CAMP positive • Growth on Mac (weak) • Appearance on BA • Larger colonies than Group A • Small zone of hemolysis Mohammed laqqan

  16. CAMP test • The “CAMP” test (acronym for developers) is used to differentiate S. agalactiae (GBS), which is positive, from other beta hemolytic strep, all of which are negative • “CAMP factor” is a soluble hemolysin produced by GBS that combines in a synergistic way with a similar hemolysin of S. aureus to form an arrowhead zone of clearing. • The staph is streaked perpendicularly to the unknown strep. After appropriate incubation time an “arrowhead-shaped” clear zone of hemolysis will appear. Mohammed laqqan

  17. S. agalactiae • Synergistic haemolysis • observed between betahemolytic • Staphylococcus • aureus and group B • streptococci. • 􀁺 Positive reaction: arrowhead haemolysis pattern Mohammed laqqan

  18. α – Haemolytic streps: Viridans streps • Not groupable by Lancefield groups • No group specific CHO • Streptococcus pneumoniae • Primary human pathogen • S.sanguis • S.mitis • S.mutans Mohammed laqqan

  19. Mohammed laqqan

  20. The Pneumococcus (Streptococcus pneumoniae) 1: Isolation on Blood agar • Pneumococci frequently require enriched media and increased CO2 tension for initial isolation. • They are usually isolated on Blood agar and incubated in a candle jar (a closed container in which a lit candle is placed to remove O2 and increase CO2 ) at 37C. On Blood agar, colonies appear small, shiny, and translucent. • They are surrounded by a zone of alpha hemolysis 2: Optochin sensitivity • Pneumococci are the only streptococci that are sensitive to the drug optochin. 3: Gram stain:gram-positive, diplococci Mohammed laqqan

  21. Mohammed laqqan

  22. The Genus Enterococcus • Enterococci are gram-positive streptococci, typically occurring in pairs and short chains, that are normal flora of the intestinal tract. Enterococci responsible for a variety of opportunistic infections in humans, and serologically belong to Lancefield group D streptococci. • On Bile Esculin agar • Unlike most bacteria, the enterococci will grow in the presence of the bile salts in the medium. • They hydrolyze the esculin, producing esculetin which reacts with the iron salts in the medium turning the agar black Mohammed laqqan

  23. Mohammed laqqan

  24. Enterococcus Mohammed laqqan

  25. Enterococcus • White colonies • Alpha and no haemolysis (rarely beta) • Also grow on MacConkey • Resembles S. pneumoniae in Gram stains • Bile esculin positive • Grows on Mac Mohammed laqqan

  26. End of lecture Mohammed laqqan

More Related